The Science of FolkloreBarnes & Noble, 1962 - 344 Seiten |
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Seite 140
... society at the present day may be divided into two classes , the people who know their genealogy and those who do not . In the early history of the Republic the government was in the hands of the former class , now it is in those of the ...
... society at the present day may be divided into two classes , the people who know their genealogy and those who do not . In the early history of the Republic the government was in the hands of the former class , now it is in those of the ...
Seite 209
... society would not think of giving such an infant a chance of growing up and becoming a Richard III ; they would destroy it outright . The Shakespearean passage sufficiently shows how such beliefs lingered on down to comparatively modern ...
... society would not think of giving such an infant a chance of growing up and becoming a Richard III ; they would destroy it outright . The Shakespearean passage sufficiently shows how such beliefs lingered on down to comparatively modern ...
Seite 316
... society of bons vivants and cannot himself have been too serious a believer in his gods and goddesses . His Zeus , for example , is even less of a bugaboo than Voltaire's deity . No doubt , he wrote for a society as emancipated as the ...
... society of bons vivants and cannot himself have been too serious a believer in his gods and goddesses . His Zeus , for example , is even less of a bugaboo than Voltaire's deity . No doubt , he wrote for a society as emancipated as the ...
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Aarne-Thompson aetiological ancient Ancient Greece Andrew Lang animal Anthropological School antiquity ballad Balor belief called Celtic century Christian chthonic common connected connexion countries course cult cumulative song curious custom dance dead death definite demons divine doubt English epic episode Europe European example existence fable fact fairy tale famous folk-lore folk-song folklorists French genuine German Greece Greek Grimm hence hero historical variants human Icelandic idea Indian Irish J. G. Frazer Jacob Grimm king known Latin Leipzig literary literature London lore magic matter mediaeval merry tale merry tales Middle Ages migrated migratory legend modern motive myth mythology nature Norse notion Oriental origin Paris plant polygenesis popular practice primitive probably proverb question reason religion rhyme rites ritual rôle Roman saga savage Saxo Grammaticus Scandinavia Scandinavian Sir J. G. Frazer Slavonic snake song story superstitions survivals Teutonic theory tree vampire well-known whilst witches woman Zeus